Haml
sea-orm
Haml | sea-orm | |
---|---|---|
25 | 82 | |
3,745 | 6,481 | |
-0.1% | 3.0% | |
7.0 | 9.5 | |
21 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Ruby | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Haml
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XRB alternatives - Haml, Slim, and Hamlit
4 projects | 30 Apr 2024
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Building a syntax highlighting extension for VS Code
First of all, I like Slim. I like the beauty and cleanness of Slim templates, to me they are way more readable than regular ERB templates and I think they fit in the ruby/Rails ecosystem very well. Slim is a close cousin to Haml, without the ugly percent characters, haha. I've used Slim exclusively in my projects since about 2016.
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Hamlet: A type-safe Haml template engine for Go
> I can't say what problem it is supposed to solve
"Haml accelerates and simplifies template creation" https://haml.info/
If you'd rather write raw HTML, keeping track of closing tags etc, then don't use HAML. No need to bash it because you personally feel it is ugly or unnecessary. FWIW I personally feel the exact opposite.
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Any web frameworks that could compare to Symfony?
Personally, I'd recommend Maud if you don't need something with runtime reloading. Not only is it much faster, it implements a template language that is effectively the Rust-syntax equivalent to Slim or Haml using a procedural macro, so you get compile-time verification that your HTML output is well-formed.
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Rux: A JSX-inspired way to render view components in Ruby
Does this support HAML-style syntax? We're 100% HAML-only for templating, whether normal Rails views or ViewComponent... https://github.com/haml/haml https://haml.info/ so going back to writing HTML or ERB feels like a huge downgrade.
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Anyone from a Typescript/React background who tried out Rust for the 1st time?
For templating, Maud is fast, gives compile-time well-formedness guarantees, and outputs minified HTML by default as a side-effect of it being based on Rust macros. (It's of a similar design philosophy to Slim and Haml)
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Why must closing tags in HTML and XML contain the name of the tag being closed, if the tag being closed can be determined by the order they were opened?
You don’t even need closing tags. Both Haml and Jade do away with closing tags altogether.
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Goddamn this tastes like eternal suffering.
That looks awfully like HAML.
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I taught the chat bot an alternative syntax for HTML, called HBML, basically just braces instead of tags... we are so screwed
Your HBML is similar to HAML - is it time for HCML? https://haml.info/
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Guess what kind of project i am building currently
it's an HTML preprocessor called HAML
sea-orm
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Rust GraphQL APIs for NodeJS Developers: Introduction
SQL with SeaORM:
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Hyper – A fast and correct HTTP implementation for Rust
Haven't used it myself, but https://github.com/SeaQL/sea-orm seems to be popular in some communities and async
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New Rustacean Looking For Guidance
sea-orm
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Having a hard time finding Actix examples that work with Seaorm.
SeaORM has an Actix example in their GitHub. https://github.com/SeaQL/sea-orm/tree/master/examples/actix_example
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A question for all those that use Python
SeaORM or the underlying SQLx query builder for SQL handling.
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Rust tech stack
SeaORM is the most advanced ORM currently available, but a lot of people prefer to just skip ORMing and go direct to the underlying SQLx query builder.
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rust web dev??
If you want to do backend development, give actix-web or Axum a try. If you need templating, take a look at Maud and if you want an ORM, take a look at SeaORM.
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Any web frameworks that could compare to Symfony?
SeaORM is the most advanced option right now (though a lot of people prefer to go direct to the underlying SQLx library) but it doesn't yet match Django ORM for offering auto-generation of draft database migrations, which is one of the things I'm unwilling to regress on. (i.e. so all I need to hand-edit is stuff like "that's a rename, not a remove+add" and so on)
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Anyone from a Typescript/React background who tried out Rust for the 1st time?
Last I checked, authentication was weak. SeaORM is probably the most mature option if you're looking for an ORM like you'd find in another ecosystem (if you're willing to explore alternative designs, try using the underlying SQLx directly).
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Programming block?
What I really like about it (apart from being a really nicely designed language, that is very expressive, powerful, performant and one of the safest because of the strict typing/memory management), is that you can kind of focus on just programming, without all the hassles around setting up a project, thinking about building/deploying etc. as tooling is really awesome as well (rust-analyzer, cargo, crates.io etc.). Libraries are usually high-quality and innovative (which is IMHO not so true for a lot of different other languages, including the ones you mentioned). E.g. if you want to create a web-server/API you could try something like this (my current recommendation): https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum and https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx for good integration of typed sql in Rust or if you want something higher level: https://github.com/SeaQL/sea-orm
What are some alternatives?
Slim - Slim is a template language whose goal is to reduce the syntax to the essential parts without becoming cryptic.
diesel - A safe, extensible ORM and Query Builder for Rust
Liquid - Liquid markup language. Safe, customer facing template language for flexible web apps.
sqlx - 🧰 The Rust SQL Toolkit. An async, pure Rust SQL crate featuring compile-time checked queries without a DSL. Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.
Hamlit - High Performance Haml Implementation
rbatis - Rust Compile Time ORM robustness,async, pure Rust Dynamic SQL
Sanitize - Ruby HTML and CSS sanitizer.
axum - Ergonomic and modular web framework built with Tokio, Tower, and Hyper
Mustache - Logic-less Ruby templates.
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
Arbre - An Object Oriented DOM Tree in Ruby
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